Elizabeth Goddard

Deception


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grabbed.

      She couldn’t catch her breath, but there were two things she needed to know. “Who are...you? What do you want?”

      Voices resounded from below.

      Katy and Meral had heard the ruckus.

      Jewel tried to scream again to let them know where she was. “Help—”

      Boxes toppled, slamming down on her bruised body. Crashing into her head.

      Darkness engulfed her.

      It was late afternoon by the time Colin steered his Jeep up to the B and B. Terry headed back to the police station to finish paperwork, and Cade headed home to his son, little Scotty, and wife, Leah, who was pregnant with their second child. But David had ridden along with Colin and would pick up his truck and Katy, his grandmother. Colin stepped from his Jeep and studied the house. Picturesque and peaceful. A bald eagle soared above the property. Trees rustled in a cooler-than-usual August breeze.

      David climbed from the Jeep and walked around, waiting on Colin. “Quiet on the outside. I just hope there’s nothing wrong on the inside.”

      “That makes two of us.”

      Colin noted David’s truck and Jewel’s Durango parked to the side. He didn’t see Meral and Buck’s rental, which caused him concern. Meral had promised to stay with Jewel, but maybe her husband had the car and was running errands in town. Colin had met Meral earlier—as beautiful as her sister but several years younger—but he had yet to meet Buck Cambridge.

      He wanted to know more about the husband. Meet the man and get a sense of him. See his interactions with his wife and sister-in-law.

      Colin had watched Meral with Jewel and could easily see she loved her sister. In his mind, in his gut, Meral wasn’t a suspect, though she’d been conveniently missing, as had her husband, when Jewel had gone into the falls. Regardless, Colin refused to depend on his gut feeling. He’d get the facts.

      He and David headed to the porch.

      “What are you going to tell her?” David asked.

      Jewel would be disappointed they still knew next to nothing. He didn’t like to heap more pain on her injuries.

      “I’ll reassure her we’ll do our best to find whoever did this.” Colin opened the front door and stepped into the foyer.

      Cell in hand and eyes wide, Meral rushed forward. “Oh, I’m so glad you’re here! It’s Jewel...” Meral fumbled and dropped her phone, but didn’t bend to pick it up. Instead, she ran away.

      Colin glanced at David, his heart plunging to his knees, and took off after Meral. “What’s happened?” he called after her.

      She ran up the stairs and called back to him without pausing. “She’s hurt.”

      And then another flight of stairs.

      “But what happened? Does she need medical attention?”

      “Maybe. Boxes fell on her. I don’t know what happened. We just heard her scream and found her in the attic. I came downstairs to grab my phone and was calling 911 when you came in.”

      Colin shoved past Meral and climbed the short steps up to the attic, where he found Katy hovered over Jewel. With unshed tears in her eyes, Katy looked at Colin. “She’s alive.”

      Katy moved away and Colin took her place. He shoved the boxes away from Jewel to make more space. None of them were crushingly heavy, but they’d done damage nonetheless. Carefully, he examined her injuries, then realized his mistake.

      What am I doing?

      He moved out of David’s way.

      David was a paramedic firefighter, and Colin let him determine if Jewel could be safely moved. David examined her, then started to lift her to carry her from the attic.

      “Let me do it.” Colin carefully slipped his arms under her neck and knees. Holding Jewel close and tight, Colin stood, kicked junk out of his way and headed for the steps out of the attic.

      In the hallway, he glanced at Meral. “Where’s her room?”

      Meral led him down another set of stairs to the second floor and then into a warm, cozy room decorated with quilts and nautical decor. He gently laid her on a rumpled bed.

      “Jewel, wake up.” God, please let her wake up. Please let her be okay.

      “Did you call for help?” he asked. He remembered Meral dropped her cell phone when she’d seen him.

      “Well... I was about to. I thought... You’re here.”

      “She needs to see a doctor.”

      “We could take her in. Would be faster than waiting.” David began assessing her injuries, focusing on her head. He had the credentials and experience, after all. Much more than Colin.

      Yet Colin didn’t want to relinquish Jewel’s well-being into anyone else’s hands.

      “Right here, feels like she has a fresh knot on her head.” David moved aside. “She likely has a concussion.”

      Colin ran his hand over where David indicated, his fingers weaving into her soft hair, searching. “See if you can get Doc Harland out here. I don’t think Jewel wants to go back to the hospital.”

      Katy and David shared a look that he didn’t like. He wasn’t giving Jewel special treatment. Was he?

      “I’ll call Doc. See what he wants us to do.” David snagged his cell from his pocket and went into the hallway.

      While David turned his attention to the call, and Meral and Katy spoke in hushed tones, Colin focused on Jewel. Lord, please let her be okay. He didn’t think his heart could take any more loss. If he’d thought he’d toughened up enough over the past twenty years since coming to Alaska to flee his bad experience in Texas, he’d been wrong.

      Why had this happened on top of yesterday?

      “Ladies, please tell me what happened.”

      Katy pursed her lips. “Well, I don’t exactly know. We were in the kitchen.”

      “I’d come down to get Jewel some tea.” Meral frowned.

      “I thought we agreed she wasn’t to be left alone.” He eyed them both.

      “But how could I have known that meant I couldn’t get her tea? That I couldn’t leave her room? Or that she couldn’t leave her room? I just went to get tea. It shouldn’t have been so hard.” Meral pressed her face into her hands.

      “No need to blame yourself.” Guilt hit Colin for being too tough on her. “I’m just trying to protect Jewel and get to the bottom of all this.”

      “To be fair, dear—” Katy sent a regretful glance Meral’s way “—we’d gotten caught up in chatting. Maybe I kept you too long.”

      “Chief Winters, I’m so sorry this happened,” Meral said. “We heard noises coming from above us. I thought I heard someone cry out, so we came first to Jewel’s bedroom and that’s when we discovered she was gone.”

      “Then we heard the awful crash.” Katy sat on the edge of the bed. “We ran up to the third floor and found the attic door hanging down.”

      “And so we climbed the steps and found Jewel covered in boxes.” Meral fidgeted. Glanced out the bedroom door. Was she waiting on Buck? Wondering where he was? Colin certainly was. This was the second time the man seemed to be missing when Jewel was hurt.

      “She could have been crushed.” Katy rubbed Jewel’s leg as if coaxing her to wake up.

      “The boxes weren’t heavy enough to crush her.” But there she was in the bed, unconscious,